Facing the Crisis of College Affordability

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Last June, the U.S. Supreme Court dealt a blow to the hopes of tens of millions of students and former students hoping to have their college loans canceled or reduced when the court rejected President Biden’s debt relief program.

In this episode of Sparking Equity, Lande Ajose, managing director of the Waverley Street Foundation and a champion of college access for all, talks with students about how college debt can have an impact on major life decisions.

But all is not lost. President Biden has finalized his new SAVE program that will provide ongoing relief to students who take out loans linked to how much money they earn after college. And in a series of little noticed initiatives, his administration has already canceled the loans of 3.6 million students totaling $127 billion. 

The key, however, is to limit the loans students take out in the first place. To that end, we talk with Dr. Jhenai Chandler from The Institute for College Access and Success and Aneesh Sohoni of One Million Degrees in Chicago, about an exciting approach called “comprehensive approaches to student success,” or CASS.  Implemented in a growing number of places, it provides comprehensive support to students to help them reach their academic goals more effectively and thus limit the debt they take on. 

Finally, Cody Hounanian of the Student Debt Crisis Center encourages students to make their voices heard in the federal rule-making process initiated by President Biden will put in place a new debt relief plan, this time under a different law from the one the Supreme Court objected to.

This episode of“Sparking Equity,” with host Lande Ajose, was produced before the podcast was rebranded “Education on the Line.”   

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